We have the privilege of meeting with
thousands of entrepreneurs every year, and in the course of those
discussions are presented with all kinds of numbers, measures, and
metrics that illustrate the promise and health of a particular company.
Sometimes, however, the metrics may not be the best gauge of what’s
actually happening in the business, or people may use different
definitions of the same metric in a way that makes it hard to understand
the health of the business.
So, while some of this may be obvious
to many of you who live and breathe these metrics all day long, we
compiled a list of the most common or confusing ones. Where appropriate,
we tried to add some notes on why investors focus on those metrics.
Ultimately, though, good metrics aren’t about raising money
from VCs — they’re about running the business in a way where founders
know how and why certain things are working (or not) … and can address
or adjust accordingly.
Business and Financial Metrics
#1 Bookings vs. Revenue
A common mistake is to use bookings and revenue interchangeably, but they aren’t the same thing.
Bookings is the value of a
contract between the company and the customer. It reflects a contractual
obligation on the part of the customer to pay the company.
Revenue is recognized when the
service is actually provided or ratably over the life of the
subscription agreement. How and when revenue is recognized is governed
by GAAP.
Letters of intent and verbal agreements are neither revenue nor bookings.
#2 Recurring Revenue vs. Total Revenue
Investors more highly value companies
where the majority of total revenue comes from product revenue (vs. from
services). Why? Services revenue is non-recurring, has much lower
margins, and is less scalable. Product revenue is the what you generate
from the sale of the software or product itself.
ARR (annual recurring revenue) is
a measure of revenue components that are recurring in nature. It should
exclude one-time (non-recurring) fees and professional service fees.
ARR per customer: Is this flat
or growing? If you are upselling or cross-selling your customers, then
it should be growing, which is a positive indicator for a healthy
business.
MRR (monthly recurring revenue): Often,
people will multiply one month’s all-in bookings by 12 to get to ARR.
Common mistakes with this method include: (1) counting non-recurring
fees such as hardware, setup, installation, professional services/
consulting agreements; (2) counting bookings (see #1).
#3 Gross Profit
While top-line bookings growth is super important, investors want to understand how profitable that revenue stream is. Gross profit provides that measure.What’s included in gross profit may vary by company, but in general all costs associated with the manufacturing, delivery, and support of a product/service should be included.
So be prepared to break down what’s included in — and excluded — from that gross profit figure.
#4 Total Contract Value (TCV) vs. Annual Contract Value (ACV)
TCV (total contract value) is
the total value of the contract, and can be shorter or longer in
duration. Make sure TCV also includes the value from one-time charges,
professional service fees, and recurring charges.
ACV (annual contract value), on the other hand, measures the value of the contract over a 12-month period. Questions to ask about ACV:
What is the size? Are you getting a few hundred dollars per
month from your customers, or are you able to close large deals? Of
course, this depends on the market you are targeting (SMB vs. mid-market
vs. enterprise).
Is it growing (and
especially not shrinking)? If it’s growing, it means customers are
paying you more on average for your product over time. That implies
either your product is fundamentally doing more (adding features and
capabilities) to warrant that increase, or is delivering so much value
customers (improved functionality over alternatives) that they are
willing to pay more for it.
See also this post on ACV.
#5 LTV (Life Time Value)
Lifetime value is the present value of the future net profit from the customer over the duration of the relationship. It helps determine the long-term value of the customer and how much net value you generate per customer after accounting for customer acquisition costs (CAC).A common mistake is to estimate the LTV as a present value of revenue or even gross margin of the customer instead of calculating it as net profit of the customer over the life of the relationship.
Reminder, here’s a way to calculate LTV:
Revenue per customer (per month) = average order value multiplied by the number of orders.
Contribution margin per customer (per month) = revenue from customer minus variable costs associated with a customer. Variable costs include selling, administrative and any operational costs associated with serving the customer.
Avg. life span of customer (in months) = 1 / by your monthly churn.
LTV = Contribution margin from customer multiplied by the average lifespan of customer.
Note, if
you have only few months of data, the conservative way to measure LTV
is to look at historical value to date. Rather than predicting average
life span and estimating how the retention curves might look, we prefer
to measure 12 month and 24 month LTV.
Another important calculation here is LTV as it contributes to margin.
This is important because a revenue or gross margin LTV suggests a
higher upper limit on what you can spend on customer acquisition. Contribution Margin LTV to CAC ratio is also a good measure to determine CAC payback and manage your advertising and marketing spend accordingly.
See also Bill Gurley on the “dangerous seductions” of the lifetime value formula.
#6 Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) vs. Revenue
In marketplace businesses, these are frequently used interchangeably. But GMV does not equal revenue!
GMV (gross merchandise volume) is
the total sales dollar volume of merchandise transacting through the
marketplace in a specific period. It’s the real top line, what the
consumer side of the marketplace is spending. It is a useful measure of
the size of the marketplace and can be useful as a “current run rate”
measure based on annualizing the most recent month or quarter.
Revenue is the portion of GMV
that the marketplace “takes”. Revenue consists of the various fees that
the marketplace gets for providing its services; most typically these
are transaction fees based on GMV successfully transacted on the
marketplace, but can also include ad revenue, sponsorships, etc. These
fees are usually a fraction of GMV.
#7 Unearned or Deferred Revenue … and Billings
In a SaaS business, this is the cash you collect at the time of the booking in advance of when the revenues will actually be realized.
As we’ve shared previously, SaaS companies only get to recognize revenue over the term of the deal as the service is delivered — even if a customer signs a huge up-front deal.
So in most cases, that “booking” goes onto the balance sheet in a
liability line item called deferred revenue. (Because the balance sheet
has to “balance,” the corresponding entry on the assets side of the
balance sheet is “cash” if the customer pre-paid for the service or
“accounts receivable” if the company expects to bill for and receive it
in the future). As the company starts to recognize revenue from the
software as service, it reduces its deferred revenue balance and
increases revenue: for a 24-month deal, as each month goes by deferred
revenue drops by 1/24th and revenue increases by 1/24th.
A good proxy to measure the growth — and ultimately the health — of a SaaS company is to look at billings,
which is calculated by taking the revenue in one quarter and adding the
change in deferred revenue from the prior quarter to the current
quarter. If a SaaS company is growing its bookings (whether through new
business or upsells/renewals to existing customers), billings will
increase.
Billings is a much better
forward-looking indicator of the health of a SaaS company than simply
looking at revenue because revenue understates the true value of the
customer, which gets recognized ratably. But it’s
also tricky because of the very nature of recurring revenue itself: A
SaaS company could show stable revenue for a long time — just by working
off its billings backlog — which would make the business seem
healthier than it truly is. This is something we therefore watch out for
when evaluating the unit economics of such businesses.
#8 CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) … Blended vs. Paid, Organic vs. Inorganic
Customer acquisition cost or CAC should be the full cost of acquiring users, stated on a per user basis. Unfortunately, CAC metrics come in all shapes and sizes.
One common problem with CAC metrics is
failing to include all the costs incurred in user acquisition such as
referral fees, credits, or discounts. Another common problem is to
calculate CAC as a “blended” cost (including users acquired organically)
rather than isolating users acquired through “paid” marketing. While blended CAC
[total acquisition cost / total new customers acquired across all
channels] isn’t wrong, it doesn’t inform how well your paid campaigns
are working and whether they’re profitable.
This is why investors consider paid CAC
[total acquisition cost/ new customers acquired through paid marketing]
to be more important than blended CAC in evaluating the viability of a
business — it informs whether a company can scale up its user
acquisition budget profitably. While an argument can be made in some
cases that paid acquisition contributes to organic acquisition, one
would need to demonstrate proof of that effect to put weight on blended
CAC.
Many investors do like seeing both, however: the blended number as
well as the CAC, broken out by paid/unpaid. We also like seeing the
breakdown by dollars of paid customer acquisition channels: for example,
how much does a paying customer cost if they were acquired via
Facebook?
Counterintuitively, it turns out that costs typically go up
as you try and reach a larger audience. So it might cost you $1 to
acquire your first 1,000 users, $2 to acquire your next 10,000, and $5
to $10 to acquire your next 100,000. That’s why you can’t afford to
ignore the metrics about volume of users acquired via each channel.
Product and Engagement Metrics
#9 Active Users
Different companies have almost
unlimited definitions for what “active” means. Some charts don’t even
define what that activity is, while others include inadvertent activity —
such as having a high proportion of first-time users or accidental
one-time users.
Be clear on how you define “active.”
#10 Month-on-month (MoM) growth
Often this measured as the simple average of monthly growth rates. But investors often prefer to measure it as CMGR (Compounded Monthly Growth Rate) since CMGR measures the periodic growth, especially for a marketplace.
Using CMGR [CMGR = (Latest Month/
First Month)^(1/# of Months) -1] also helps you benchmark growth rates
with other companies. This would otherwise be difficult to compare due
to volatility and other factors. The CMGR will be smaller than the
simple average in a growing business.
#11 Churn
There’s all kinds of churn — dollar churn, customer churn, net dollar churn — and there are varying definitions for how churn is measured. For example, some companies measure it on a revenue basis annually, which blends upsells with churn.Investors look at it the following way:
Monthly unit churn = lost customers/prior month totalIt is also important to differentiate between gross churn and net revenue churn —
Retention by cohort
Month 1 = 100% of installed baseLatest Month = % of original installed base that are still transacting
Gross churn: MRR lost in a given month/MRR at the beginning of the month.
Net churn: (MRR lost minus MRR from upsells) in a given month/MRR at the beginning of the month.
The difference between the two is significant. Gross churn estimates the actual loss to the business, while net revenue churn understates the losses (as it blends upsells with absolute churn).
#12 Burn Rate
Burn rate is the rate at which cash is
decreasing. Especially in early stage startups, it’s important to know
and monitor burn rate as companies fail when they are running out of
cash and don’t have enough time left to raise funds or reduce expenses.
As a reminder, here’s a simple calculation:
Monthly cash burn = cash balance at the beginning of the year minus cash balance end of the year / 12
It’s also important to measure net burn vs. gross burn:
Net burn [revenues (including
all incoming cash you have a high probability of receiving) – gross
burn] is the true measure of amount of cash your company is burning
every month.
Gross burn on the other hand only looks at your monthly expenses + any other cash outlays.
Investors tend to focus on net burn to
understand how long the money you have left in the bank will last for
you to run the company. They will also take into account the rate at
which your revenues and expenses grow as monthly burn may not be a
constant number.
See also Fred Wilson on burn rate.
#13 Downloads
Downloads (or number of apps delivered by distribution deals) are really just a vanity metric.
Investors want to see engagement,
ideally expressed as cohort retention on metrics that matter for that
business — for example, DAU (daily active users), MAU (monthly active
users), photos shared, photos viewed, and so on.
Presenting Metrics Generally
#14 Cumulative Charts (vs. Growth Metrics)
Cumulative charts by definition always
go up and to the right for any business that is showing any kind of
activity. But they are not a valid measure of growth — they can go
up-and-to-the-right even when a business is shrinking. Thus, the metric is not a useful indicator of a company’s health.
Investors like to look at monthly GMV,
monthly revenue, or new users/customers per month to assess the growth
in early stage businesses. Quarterly charts can be used for later-stage
businesses or businesses with a lot of month-to-month volatility in
metrics.
#15 Chart Tricks
There a number of such tricks,
but a few common ones include not labeling the Y-axis; shrinking scale
to exaggerate growth; and only presenting percentage gains without
presenting the absolute numbers. (This last one is misleading since
percentages can sound impressive off a small base, but are not an
indicator of the future trajectory.)
#16 Order of Operations
It’s fine to present metrics in any order as you tell your story.
When initially evaluating businesses,
investors often look at GMV, revenue, and bookings first because they’re
an indicator of the size of the business. Once investors have a sense
of the the size of the business, they’ll want to understand growth to
see how well the company is performing. These basic metrics, if
interesting, then compel us to look even further.
As one of our partners who recently had a baby observes here: It’s
almost like doing a health check for your baby at the pediatrician’s
office. Check weight and height, and then compare to previous estimates
to make sure things look healthy before you go any deeper!
Source:http://a16z.stfi.re/2015/08/21/16-metrics/?sf=yzxaj&utm_campaign=hiten-dot-com&utm_medium=email&utm_source=saas-weekly51
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